Mordvalaisten, tsheremissien ja votjakkien kosinta- ja häätavoista Vertaileva tutkimus

audiobook

Mordvalaisten, tsheremissien ja votjakkien kosinta- ja häätavoista Vertaileva tutkimus

by Albert Hämäläinen

FI·~7 hours·5 chapters

Chapters

5 total
1

MORDVALAISTEN, TSHEREMISSIEN JA VOTJAKKIEN KOSINTA- JA HÄÄTAVOISTA

0:06
2

ALBERT HÄMÄLÄINEN

2:36
3

SISÄLLYS:

42:50
4

I

3:56:46
5

II

3:05:56

Description

This concise study offers a rare glimpse into the courtship and wedding customs of three lesser‑known Finno‑Ugric peoples. Drawing on field notes collected during expeditions between 1908 and 1910, the author weaves together linguistic, historical, and ethnographic material to reconstruct how these communities approached marriage. The work is grounded in a scholarly framework approved by the University of Helsinki’s faculty of philosophy.

The first part presents detailed descriptions of each group’s practices—from how a bride is secured, through age expectations and dowry negotiations, to the elaborate rituals that mark engagement, the nuptial journey, and the wedding feast. Comparative tables highlight similarities and differences, while the second section situates these customs alongside those of neighboring peoples, exploring themes such as economic motives, gender roles, and ritual symbolism.

Listeners will appreciate the author’s careful synthesis of archival sources, personal observations, and rare documentary excerpts. The book serves as an engaging portal for anyone curious about how marriage once structured social life in remote Arctic societies, and it illuminates broader patterns of human relationship across cultures.

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Details

Full title

Mordvalaisten, tsheremissien ja votjakkien kosinta- ja häätavoista Vertaileva tutkimus Vertaileva tutkimus

Language

fi

Duration

~7 hours (449K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Tapio Riikonen

Release date

2020-09-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

AH

Albert Hämäläinen

1881–1949

His work preserved valuable knowledge about Finno-Ugric peoples at a moment when older ways of life were rapidly changing. Later, he turned that same careful eye toward the buildings, folk culture, and traditional livelihoods of central Finland and the forest Finns of Scandinavia.

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